Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600

This article provides a critical survey of research on social and economic stratification within the province of Jämtland, Mid-Scandinavia, during the Viking Age, Middle Ages, and the 16th century. Both historical, archaeological, and toponymical research is covered.The author shows that the grade o...

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Main Author: Holm, Olof
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Novus forlag 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/127
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spelling ftnovusforlagojs:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/127 2023-05-15T18:11:52+02:00 Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600 Holm, Olof 2010-11-28 http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/127 unknown Novus forlag http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/127/126 http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/127 Opphavsrett 2015 Collegium Medievale Collegium Medievale; Vol. 23 (2010) Collegium Medievale; Vol 23 (2010) 2387-6700 0801-9282 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article Fagfellevurdert artikkel 2010 ftnovusforlagojs 2022-04-29T11:26:13Z This article provides a critical survey of research on social and economic stratification within the province of Jämtland, Mid-Scandinavia, during the Viking Age, Middle Ages, and the 16th century. Both historical, archaeological, and toponymical research is covered.The author shows that the grade of social and economical stratification among the peasant population of Jämtland during the Viking Age and the early Middle Ages, up to circa 1350, has been judged very differently in former research. Some scholars have characterized Jämtland during this period as a strongly stratified society, others have characterized Jämtland as a relatively egalitarian society, where the distance between the top and the bottom were smaller than in many other parts of Scandinavia. However, when it comes to the 16th century there seems to be a consensus among scholars that Jämtland was unusually egalitarian.Scholars have also put forward different opinions of what the elites of Jämtland lived on. Some have claimed that a surplus from trade was more important than a surplus from farming, while others have claimed that before 1350 an agrarian surplus was the base for the elite, but that this stratified society collapsed with the Black Death and the late medieval agrarian crisis. The author objects to the latter opinions and points out that there is no evidence for a large change of the social structure of Jämtland at the time of the agrarian crisis.All this concerns the agrarian population of Jämtland. The author also touches on the Sami population in Jämtland, but notes that questions about social and economic stratification within this group before 1600 have not been disussed in earlier research, due to the lack of sources. However, sources from the first half of the 17th century give the impression of a strongly stratified Sami society. Article in Journal/Newspaper sami Novus - Online tidsskrifter (Novus forlag)
institution Open Polar
collection Novus - Online tidsskrifter (Novus forlag)
op_collection_id ftnovusforlagojs
language unknown
description This article provides a critical survey of research on social and economic stratification within the province of Jämtland, Mid-Scandinavia, during the Viking Age, Middle Ages, and the 16th century. Both historical, archaeological, and toponymical research is covered.The author shows that the grade of social and economical stratification among the peasant population of Jämtland during the Viking Age and the early Middle Ages, up to circa 1350, has been judged very differently in former research. Some scholars have characterized Jämtland during this period as a strongly stratified society, others have characterized Jämtland as a relatively egalitarian society, where the distance between the top and the bottom were smaller than in many other parts of Scandinavia. However, when it comes to the 16th century there seems to be a consensus among scholars that Jämtland was unusually egalitarian.Scholars have also put forward different opinions of what the elites of Jämtland lived on. Some have claimed that a surplus from trade was more important than a surplus from farming, while others have claimed that before 1350 an agrarian surplus was the base for the elite, but that this stratified society collapsed with the Black Death and the late medieval agrarian crisis. The author objects to the latter opinions and points out that there is no evidence for a large change of the social structure of Jämtland at the time of the agrarian crisis.All this concerns the agrarian population of Jämtland. The author also touches on the Sami population in Jämtland, but notes that questions about social and economic stratification within this group before 1600 have not been disussed in earlier research, due to the lack of sources. However, sources from the first half of the 17th century give the impression of a strongly stratified Sami society.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Holm, Olof
spellingShingle Holm, Olof
Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600
author_facet Holm, Olof
author_sort Holm, Olof
title Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600
title_short Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600
title_full Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600
title_fullStr Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600
title_full_unstemmed Social och ekonomisk stratifiering i Jämtland 800-1600
title_sort social och ekonomisk stratifiering i jämtland 800-1600
publisher Novus forlag
publishDate 2010
url http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/127
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_source Collegium Medievale; Vol. 23 (2010)
Collegium Medievale; Vol 23 (2010)
2387-6700
0801-9282
op_relation http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/127/126
http://ojs.novus.no/index.php/CM/article/view/127
op_rights Opphavsrett 2015 Collegium Medievale
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